The House Judiciary Committee pressed start Tuesday on its bipartisan investigation into big tech companies like Google, Facebook and Twitter with a hearing on how the companies impact the news industry and misinformation.

Witnesses included David Chavern of News Media Alliance, a group representing approximately 2,000 newspapers. Chavern’s testimony comes after his group published an ill-received study Monday claiming Google pulled in $4 billion in revenue in 2018 by scraping news publishers’ content without paying the publisher. Journalists contended the study was based on data from almost a decade ago.

Other witnesses included Kevin Riley, editor of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, David Pitofsky, general counsel of News Corp, and Sally Hubbard of the Open Markets Institute. Many in the news industry maintain that social media giants like Facebook make money off of their content, but it’s not trickling down to them.

Cicilline was adamant that the investigation will not focus on any tech company in particular but will determine if companies are stifling competition and harming consumers when he announced the probe earlier in June.

“I do have a lot of people talking about monopoly when they mention those three in particular,” Trump said, referring to Google, Facebook, and Amazon. He continued, “we are looking at [antitrust] very seriously … Look, that doesn’t mean we’re doing it, but we’re certainly looking and I think most people surmise that, I would imagine.”

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